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12 Reviews
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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Black and White,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
I loved this movie, the best I have seen in years. If you are in an interacial relationship I promise you that it will jerk some tears. There was some decrepancies in the timeline and war draft rules for vietnam, but if you set those aside you will love this movie. I am a white man married to a black woman and we deal with these problems everyday, so it really hits home even if it takes place 30 years ago. The summary of the movie has nothing to do with the actual screenplay, I rented this thinking it was a war movie, but it was a love story with about 10 minutes of battle scenes. I was not dissapointed in the end.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Most powerful Racial Film that I have ever seen,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
Wow what a pleasant surprise! A film with a great message, good acting and amazing talent. What is the most important thing in this life? This movie answers this question. The message of a fathers love is so real and so amazing in this film. The amazing sacrifice is the true sign of Love that is so evident in this film and no matter what color you are or where you are from this love can bring us all together if we let it and if we are willing to pay the price for it.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
outstanding - outstanding,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
this is a movie i can recommend with no reservations. although i did recognize a number of cast members, the leads, almost without exception were unknown to me. each and every one of them will hopefully go on to bigger movies. by bigger i mean in scope as i don't think there are going to be bigger movies. maybe in cash dollars there will be, but not in stature. i am happy to say this movie brought tears to my eyes. there are happy moments and very sad moments in this movie but there is also a message for anyone that wants to hear it. this was a great movie and i enjoyed it immensely. highly recommend, if my recommendation means anything at all.gary in az.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Great American Film,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
This is an outstanding film about a white male who falls in love with an African-American woman in the rural south during the early sixties. The two are married, only for the husband being drafted during the Vietnam War. Throughout the film, you relive the history that takes place: the assassinations of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King, the cruel treatment of the blacks in the South. I believe this movie has been one of the best films released in some time, and yet, has not been widely acclaimed. I hope that all of you take the time to watch this movie.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Don't let the title fool you...,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
This movie is not really about a soldier or any changes he undergoes. It goes much deeper than that and the person who undergoes the change is not the soldier.The original title for this film was "The Painting" which is a more fitting title and which created a sense of awe and wonder as the story unfolded. Where is this painting? What is it about? What does it have to do with these people? Oh wait I know what the painting is of!... Oh crap, I was wrong, but there went my heartstrings. Initially I decided to see this movie because it had Stacey Dash whom I've had a crush on for years. She plays a teenager in this movie and was 35 or 36 at the time. She was also in "Clueless" where she played a 16 year old while actually being 29. So I sat down to watch this movie and was very pleasantly surprised by the storyline and depth of emotion that was touched within me. Set in the 1960s, this is a story about honoring your family, standing up for what you believe in, and the decisions necessary to follow your heart knowing someone is going to get hurt. Is there such a thing as too open-minded? And is there any hope of redemption for the closed-minded? Is a gap between generations inevitable or can it be bridged? Also starring Clifton Davis as the loyal friend, confidante and employee; Charles Shaughnessy as the stalwart patriarch; Heath Freeman as the son with seemingly 2 fathers; Stacey Dash as the love interest who fuels a young man's imagination of what could be and his search for equality. Watch this movie and see how love can fracture and heal.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Soldiers of Change,
By movie watcher (Seminole Oklahoma USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
I much enjoyed Soldiers of Change. The movie takes two families looking at the same events and how those events affected their lives. A must see.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Soldiers of change,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (Amazon Instant Video)
SPOILER!!! DO NOT READ IF YOU WANT TO WATCH THE LOUSY MOVIE IN ITS' ENTIRETY!! Clifton Davis Dies leaving wife, baby, and saving a little Vietnamese girl. Wasted toooo much time for a lousy ending. Father dies too. Only good point... Daughter in law and uncle inherit fortune. Sad about the civil rights movement and how people treat one another. We all came from One and He will judge those who hate His children.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Good!,
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
I had started watching this movie on the Lifetime Movie Network in January 2009. I did not get to finish watching it, so I was very happy to find it on Amazon.com. It was a very moving film. With good actors and a story that needed to be told.
4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
I think this professional review says it all...,
By Don't Waste Your Money (BOCOMO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
"Soldiers of Change" (aka "The Painting")by Bob Westal (2002-05-22) 2002, Un-rated, 120 minutes, A Joshua D. Rose Film The thousands of mixed-race couples brave enough to get married before the establishment of civil rights deserve a movie, but no one deserves "The Painting." This is the sort of film that would drive Miss Daisy to upchuck at the shenanigans of its saintly, cardboard characters and its bizarre, rose-colored depiction of U.S. race relations. "The Painting" starts out as a sort of wannabe Ivory-Merchant, a production of "The Not Ready for Masterpiece Theater" players, and then it gets weird. Directed by Joshua Rose and written by Buddy Shieffield, with a story by David Rose and J. Marina Muhlfriedel, this is the story of the love between the white, rich and privileged Randy Barrington IV (played by Cody Dorkin at age 13, and from 18 on by Heath Freeman) and the black and somewhat less privileged Hallie Ayres (Shari Dyon Perry and Stacey Dash). The problem is, we're in the 1960s, and Randy is the son of an art-obsessed multimillionaire. A third-generation Kansas City-born tycoon with a mysterious British accent, Randolf Barrington IV (Charles Shaughnessy, TV's "The Nanny") is a basically decent and broadminded man, but he ultimately draws the line at an interracial marriage. Randolf the elder is notable because he's the only person around with the slightest persistent character flaw. The reason no one else in the movie has any flaws is that they all listen to Thomas Ayres, the Barringtons' butler and driver. Played with dignity and a touch of humor by showbiz lifer Clifton Davis ("Any Given Sunday," "That's My Mama!"), Ayres is in the Sidney Poitier tradition of superhuman cinematic black men. His superpower is that every time he gives a speech, which he does as often as most people change their underwear, whoever is listening immediately realizes the error of his or her ways. (Mr. Dickson of "Room 222" had the same ability. Must be some kind of power-ring bequeathed by the Guardians of Oa....) As the story progresses and the millionaire tries to keep his son away from Thomas's niece, the butler quits rather than be a party to keeping the couple apart. A whole lot of other stuff happens over the film's 105 minutes, but, despite a mostly African-American cast, most of it still happens to the white people. Speaking of the cast, nobody - black or white - emerges unscathed. Sometimes the actors almost connect; other times, they barely seem to be listening to each other. I enjoyed seeing Ben Vereen ("Roots," "All That Jazz," etc.), a favorite of my youth, but I didn't know what to make of his wizened blind gospel singer. He would be just another walking, talking cliche, except that also seems to be putting the moves on a teenage male civil rights worker. Boy, but these people are ahead of their time.Yet, "The Painting" is the sort of sixties movie where the makers are so terrified we'll forget it's about the sixties that they feel compelled to include every historical event of the time. There will be shock and horror after the assassinations of JFK, MLK, and RFK. There will be arguments about the Vietnam war. We will hear "A Whiter Shade of Pale" and "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida." We will spend time with the grunts in 'Nam. Ultimately, the only thing which saves viewers of "The Painting" from unrelieved torture is its steadily growing shamelessness. By the film's end, the plot has taken so many turns in its desperation to make us feel something, a kind of giddiness takes over. A few tragic moments might actually threaten to cause a brief lump in the throat - but then something so absurdly contrived happens, so obviously inflicted on the characters, that all you can do is giggle. Note to screenwriters: If you're going to create an African-American character who's a kindly, wise and compassionate servant, and people keep calling him "Uncle," you might want to think through the implications of naming him "Thomas."
4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great acting by a superb cast!,
By
This review is from: Soldiers of Change (DVD)
I began watching this film wondering if it would have anything for me or any substance, but was soon engrossed by the fine acting and the story line. Towards the end, you might begin to think it's a totally tragic tale, but the happy ending more than makes up for it; I was almost in tears! Well worth purchasing or renting!
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Soldiers of Change by Stacey Dash (DVD - 2006)
$11.99
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